My thanks to NetGalley and the publisher Kensington Books, Citadel for an advance copy of this biography of a man who worked in the shadows spying on the enemies of his nation, one who was almost Zelig-like in being around the most important people and players, and yet a man with secrets, and even worse maybe a traitor.
The incomparable Bruce Campbell on the show Burn Notice, a story of a spy betrayed by his agency, who works to help others, has a comment about people who work in the intelligence game. "You know spies—a bunch of (a word that rhymes with witchy) little girls". Even a light skimming of books about espionage will show these. Spy agencies spend just as much time going after each other as they do rival forces. MI5 hates MI6, entire libraries have been written about the battles between CIA and the FBI. Even inside agencies, there are battles, for credit, for blame. Especially for blame. Success might have many parents, failure means the child is made an orphan, tossed out in the cold, and destroyed in thousands of ways. Agencies are old school, chums, with the same background, same education, and same mindset. An outsider, has few chances, no matter what that person does. Dick Ellis was one of the longest serving intelligence officers in MI5, but doubts arose about his loyalties, not helped by the fact that Ellis was hiding a few things. However was he a traitor? The Eagle in the Mirror by Jesse Fink is a biography, well as much as one can write about a man who dealt in secrets, a history of the intelligence landscape from World War II, and the secrets that people keep, secrets that be little white lies, up to betrayal in a grand sense.
Dick Ellis was born in Australia, though the date has changed for reasons unknown. His mother died early, leaving a father who was very much older, and a family that soon grew fractured. Ellis was very good at learning on his terms, and soon fell in love with the idea of England. Ellis came to England and soon joined the Army to serve in World War I, actions which haunted him the rest of his life. After time in France, he was transferred to India where he soon learned a few languages that would help him in his new career in intelligence. Ellis was soon in the Great Game working in Russia to fight the Communists, where his first touch with infamy happened. Ellis married, but not well the marriage ended, and Ellis did his best to pretend this marriage never happened, as his brother-in-law had ties to Russian intelligence. During the lead up to World War II, Ellis made many contacts with German agents, agents who might also have had ties to Russia. Which years later came to haunt Ellis, and tainted his entire career.
A riveting read not only about intelligence, and reputations can be made and destroyed, but on how even important people can be lost to history. Dick Ellis was a fascinating man, a real life agent who found himself close to important events in history, and yet so little is known about him. Jesse Fink discusses this in the opening chapter, just trying to get information from his family was difficult. Even finding photographs was arduous. The book is a big history of the behind the scenes dealing inside the agencies while fighting first the Axis, than the Cold War. Fink is very fair pointing out a lot of odd inconsistencies in Ellis story, but also pointing out the wrong information being used against him. Being a spy means being a liar. So truth is not just bendable it is broken constantly. Fink has done incredible research in trying to get to the real story, and an amazing story it is.
A spy book that is less about spying and more about humans being humans. Jealous, envious, greedy, evil, honorable, and trying to do the best for one's country. A whodunit and a whydunit, all with a touch of espionage. And maybe truth. A really good book for true espionage fans.